A Jewish Philosophy of Man
Rabbi Soloveitchik’s talks on the nature of man and the human experience
Edited by Mark Smilowitz
Contents
| Series Introduction |
| Download this entire series as a digital book |
| Scans of Course Material (Readings, Bulletins, Correspondence) |
| Lecture 1: Introduction to the Jewish Philosophy of Man 🔗
Judaism, and religion in general, seeks knowledge, but Judaism’s primary questions, |
| Lecture 2: Methodology for a Jewish Religious Anthropology, from Metaphysical to Practical 🔗
Judaism’s religious anthropology is metaphysical, unlike the pragmatic inclination of science. |
| Lecture 3: Three Approaches to Man 🔗
The Bible, Greek philosophy, and modern science all have different views on man, |
| Lecture 4: Judaism’s View of Man as a Lonely Being 🔗
Judaism, through halakhic and biblical sources, claims that man is a lonely, solitary, |
| Lecture 5: The Dialectical Approach to the Individual and the Community 🔗
The Bible presents a dialectical view of man who oscillates between an individual |
| Lecture 6: Judaism’s Glorification of the Anonymous Person 🔗
Halakhic and Aggadic sources stress axiological democracy, the equal worth of the great scholar |
| Lecture 7: Prophetic Loneliness as the Solution to the Problem of Jewish Loneliness 🔗
The aloneness of the prophets is a great experience of confidence in one’s unique self |
| Lecture 8: The Content of the Covenant of Egypt – The Jewish Existential Community 🔗
Jewish uniqueness is expressed by the covenant. The covenant compels the individual |
